Results for "Max Roach"

Maxwell Lemuel Roach is a percussionist, drummer, and
jazz composer. He has worked with many of the greatest
jazz musicians, including Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker,
Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus and Sonny Rollins. He is
widely considered to be one of the most important
drummers in the history of jazz.

Roach was born in Newland, North Carolina, to Alphonse
and Cressie Roach; his family moved to Brooklyn, New
York when he was 4 years old. He grew up in a musical
context, his mother being a gospel singer, and he started to
play bugle in parade orchestras at a young age. At the age
of 10, he was already playing drums in some gospel bands.
He performed his first big-time gig in New York City at the
age of sixteen, substituting for Sonny Greer in a
performance with the Duke Ellington Orchestra.
In 1942, Roach started to go out in the jazz clubs of the
52nd Street and at 78th Street & Broadway for Georgie
Jay's Taproom (playing with schoolmate Cecil Payne)

From 1953, when it was set up, to 1964, when it was acquired by ABC, Riverside Records rivalled Blue Note and Prestige as one of the leading independent jazz labels based in New York City. The founders of all three labels were jazz fans who operated on slim margins and became producers partly because they enjoyed ...

Catenary Oath presents a 2018 solo recital by pianist and composer Anthony Coleman, recorded at Jordan Hall in the New England Conservatory in Boston where he also teaches. The album, available as a limited edition LP or digitally, contains a mix of originals and standards all given deeply personalized interpretations by the pianist. Coleman's profile has ...

From the 1995-2003 archive: This article first appeared at All About Jazz in March 2001. A charmed life might be a good way of describing that of Bill Bruford. Always at the center of and driving vastly creative projects, including King Crimson, Yes, Earthworks, Genesis, Bruford, Gong and many other collaborations of like minds, ...

Meet Markus Rutz Markus Rutz plays trumpet with bluesy, soulful style and a tone that has been called gorgeous. He composes music from his home base in jny: Chicago, Illinois where he also performs modern jazz. As described by Downbeat's J.D. Considine, with his big, dark tone and a fluid ease to his phrasing," trumpet player, ...

The city of jny: Seattle has a jazz history that dates back to the very beginnings of the form. It was home to the first integrated club scene in America on Jackson St in the 1920's and '30s. It saw a young Ray Charles arrive as a teenager to escape the nightmare of Jim Crow in ...

Operating on minimum finance and maximum passion, Brooklyn's Strata-East label was a pivotal platform for the spiritual-jazz movement that emerged during the Civil Rights struggle of the 1970s. Its closest contemporary comparator was Chicago's Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. Both were non-profit organisations. The AACM was non-profit by design. With Strata-East, co-founder Charles Tolliver ...

The first week of April 2020: images crystalized the daily news reports; a dystopian Times Square; Piazza Navona in Rome, emptied of tourists, Barcelona's Basílica de la Sagrada Família standing like an abstract ruin, makeshift morgues in hospital parking lots. The jazz world is small but still a microcosm of society with interdependencies that run deep. ...

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